Bringing Care Closer to Mothers and Newborns: Develop a Household to Hospital

Transcription

Bringing Care Closer to Mothers and Newborns: Develop a Household to Hospital
Bringing Care Closer to Mothers
and Newborns:
Using the Gap Analysis Tool to
Develop a Household to Hospital
Continuum of Care
By Susan Otchere and Elizabeth Ransom
Introduction
Survival poses a daily challenge for poor women and newborns living in rural communities, where most preventable
maternal and newborn (MNB) deaths occur. Global statistics
show that more than half a million women die each year from
complications that arise during pregnancy, labor and birth,1
immediately after birth, or within the first week of life.2 Of
the estimated 130 million babies born each year, 4 million die
in the first four weeks of life (the neonatal period) and a similar number of babies are stillborn.3 Ninety-nine percent of
these MNB deaths occur in developing countries.
The Household to Hospital Continuum of Care
The HHCC approach aims to improve the capacity of caregivers to provide protective and curative care to mothers and
newborns in households, peripheral health facilities, and district hospitals (Figure 1).4 HHCC builds on existing systems
to bring care closer to women and newborns. At the household and community level, which focuses on the woman, her
family, and community members, the HHCC promotes healthy
pregnancy and birth practices, better self care, recognition of
complications, and timely health service seeking.
For the majority of mothers and infants in developing countries, most lifesaving care remains out of reach. Because complications of pregnancy and childbirth are unpredictable, all
women and newborns need access to lifesaving care.
However, care available at the household and community
level, in peripheral health facilities (see Box 1 on page 2) and
in some referral facilities (e.g., district hospitals) often do not
adequately treat many MNB complications.
The HHCC promotes targeting peripheral health facilities
(first-level of care)5 as a significant contributor to improving
the chances of survival for women and newborns because
they often link households and district referral facilities; represent the first point of contact for many women within the
Timing of care is also essential. Most women and their newborns do not receive the care they need during childbirth and
the first week after birth, when they are most vulnerable,
often resulting in fatal outcomes. However, if women; their
families; caregivers such as community health workers
(CHWs) and traditional birth attendants (TBAs); and other
health care providers were all well-prepared for both normal
childbirth and possible MNB complications, then women and
their babies would stand a better chance to receive the skilled
and timely care needed to preserve health and ensure survival.
Building on experience working to improve MNB health
within communities, Save the Children conceptualized and
developed the "Household to Hospital Continuum of Care"
(HHCC) approach to provide pragmatic steps to ensure the
availability of and access to quality MNB services at peripheral health facilities and district hospitals, while strengthening
linkages between them.
Figure 1: The Household to Hospital Continuum of Care
An enabling environment with supportive policies, standards,
resources and political commitment to ensure that all women and
their newborns have the best chance to survive and thrive.
formal health system; are usually accessible to villages; and
are often available both day and night. The HHCC recommends using the peripheral health facility or outreach (see
Table 1, page 4) to bring lifesaving services such as basic
emergency obstetric care (BEmOC), essential newborn
care (ENC) (see Box 2, page 3), and family planning services closer to women and newborns. Moreover, the need
for services is great because few peripheral health facilities
in developing countries are currently able to provide these
services. At the district hospital level, where government
resources are normally concentrated, the HHCC aims to
strengthen capacity and improve the availability of quality
emergency and non-emergency care.
In addition, HHCC aims to promote around-the-clock
availability of lifesaving service in all health facilities, and
to link the three levels of care through communication and
referral systems, and improve geographic access. HHCC
implementation requires support from governments and
civil society to make lifesaving care both available and
accessible to those who need it.
Implementing the HHCC
To enable implementation of HHCC, Save the Children
developed the Gap Analysis Tool (GAT).6
What is the GAT?
The GAT is an assessment tool used to identify gaps within MNB programs.
The GAT's three major uses
1. It is used by program planners to identify gaps in care
(availability, access to and quality of supplies and services), assess which interventions can be provided at each
of three levels (household, peripheral facility, and hospital), and then select recommended international “best
practices.” Best practices are health interventions that
have been evaluated and tested and are accepted by the
international community, like using oxytocin to prevent
and treat postpartum hemorrhage, and preparing for
birth by setting money aside for emergencies, arranging
transport, and identifying blood donors.
Box 1: Peripheral facilities defined
Peripheral facilities, appropriately referred to as "first-level" care are found between the (district) referral facility and communities themselves. They include health centers, maternal and child health units, basic health units and health posts.
Names vary by country. WHO divides peripheral facilities into two classifications: Type I and II health centers.
Type
Name
Characteristics
I
This type may include:
maternal and child
health units, basic
health units, health
posts, dispensaries
•
•
•
•
•
•
II
This type is larger and
usually a heath center
in a rural area
•
•
•
•
•
•
limited ambulatory and curative services
community development
no beds—possibly one maternity bed
staffed by auxiliary nurse or auxiliary midwife
family planning
population served <10,000
ambulatory and curative services
health promotion, prevention and education
support for sub-centers
maternity and observation beds
outpatient operating room
staffed by multidisciplinary team (midwife, doctor,
clinical officer, medical assistant, nurse, and auxiliary health workers)
• family planning
• small basic laboratory
• population served <100,000
Sources:
1.World Health Organization (1992a) The role of health centers in the development of urban health systems. Report of a
WHO study group on primary health care in urban areas.Technical Report Series 827.
2.World Health Organization (2005).The World Health Report 2005. Make every mother and child count.
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Using the Gap Analysis Tool to Develop a Household to Hospital Continuum of Care
2. It helps program planners compare international best
practices with national standards of care and the latter
with the actual MNB intervention in place. The tool
provides the evidence needed for dialogue with policymakers and development partners on existing national
policies and protocols on MNB care. It guides program
managers and planners in designing new and improving
existing MNB programs.
3. It assesses the enabling environment to support the provision of good quality MNB services. The GAT recommends proven indicators to help monitor progress and
direct resources to address gaps in availability, access to,
and provision of quality MNB care.7,8,9
Contents of the GAT
GAT best practices are categorized as follows:
• Community education and mobilization
• Maternal care during pregnancy, labor and delivery, and
the postpartum period
• Essential newborn care
• Quality assurance
• Logistics supply (e.g. human resources, facilities, equipment, medicines, and supplies)
• Documentation
• Policy and standards on MNB care
The GAT assesses what should be in place at the three levels of the HHCC to improve MNB care (see Table 4 on
page 9). It lists best practices for each level during the following four time periods:
1. Antenatal period
2. Labor, birth, and immediate care of newborn
3. Immediate MNB postpartum care and ENC during
the first 72 hours
4. Postpartum care at six weeks
Five questions guide the GAT process. These head the
columns on the GAT worksheet:
Step 1: What interventions should be available? (i.e., best
practices)
Step 2: What is the current national standard?
Step 3: What is the actual MNB intervention in place?
Step 4: What are the gaps in providing quality MNB care?
Step 5: What can be done to improve current MNB care
to promote positive health outcomes for women
and their newborns?
Box 2: Definitions
1. Basic Emergency Obstetric Care1 includes the following six lifesaving procedures (or "signal functions"): (1) parenteral (intravenous/intramuscular) oxytocics; (2) parenteral antibiotics; (3) parenteral
anticonvulsants and/or sedatives; (4) manual removal of placenta; (5) removal of retained products
(e.g. with manual vacuum aspiration kit); and (6) assisted vaginal delivery (e.g., using a vacuum extraction or by forceps delivery). A facility offering all six lifesaving procedures is a Basic EmOC facility.
2. Comprehensive Emergency Obstetric Care2 includes the provision of eight lifesaving procedures that
include: all the six Basic EmOC functions plus, obstetric surgery such as cesarean section and safe
blood transfusion. A facility offering all eight lifesaving procedures is a Comprehensive EmOC facility.
3. Essential newborn care3 comprises immediate care at birth, care during the first day and care up to
28 days. Care includes care for the preterm baby, newborn resuscitation, antibiotics for treatment of
infections, treatment for tetanus and diarrhea.
4. A skilled attendant4 is a health professional (for example midwife, doctor or nurse) with competencies for care during normal birth and the capacity to recognize, manage and refer complications in the
woman and newborn.
References
1. WHO-UNICEF-UNFPA. Guidelines for monitoring the availability and use of obstetric services. 1997.
2.WHO-UNICEF-UNFPA. Ibid.
3. Beck D., Ganges F, Goldman S, Long P. Care of the Newborn Reference Manual. Saving Newborn
Lives/Save the Children Federation. 2004
4.World Health Organization. Skilled attendants vital to saving lives of mothers and newborns. 2004.
Save the Children
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Table 1: Recommended essential skills for managing MNB complications at peripheral facilities
For the Mother
Complication
(Life threatening)
Lifesaving1 procedure
Bleeding (postpartum
hemorrhage)
What is needed
Who can perform lifesaving procedure at
Peripheral facility
Type 1 HC
Type II HC
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
IM/IV oxytocics*
IV Fluids
Referral
Bleeding (from retained Manual removal* of placenta
placenta)
Oxytocin
AMTSL3
Referral
Gloves
Antibiotics
Oxytocin, IV Fluids
Auxiliary Nurse/
Midwife
Bleeding (from retained MVA*
products of conception)
MVA kit
Oxytocin, IV Fluids
Antibiotics
Family Planning
Antibiotics (ampicillin,
metronidazole, co-trimoxazole)
Tetanus toxoid injection
syringe, needle
Auxiliary Nurse/
Midwife
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
Auxiliary Nurse/
Midwife
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
Magnesium sulphate1
Diazepam
Referral and prompt delivery within 12 hours of
onset of convulsions in
eclampsia
Partogram
Referral
Vacuum extraction kit
Auxiliary Nurse/
Midwife
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
Infection (from prema- IM/IV antibiotics*
ture rupture of membranes)
(Protective Care)
Clean delivery
Pre-eclampsia/ eclamp- IM/IV anticonvulsants*
sia
Referral for prompt delivery
Obstructed Labor
Monitor labor with partogram
Assisted vaginal delivery by
vacuum extraction*
Rehydration with IV Fluids
Shock
Anemia
For the Newborn
Birth Asphyxia
Low Birth Weight
Infection
Auxiliary Nurse/
Midwife
Refer to Type 2 or hospital for cesarean section or other procedure
IV fluids, IV tubes, catheters Auxiliary Nurse/
Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse/
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Doctor, clinical officer,
medical assistant
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
(Protective care)
Iron Folate
IPT, ITN, bed nets
Deworming
Iron Folate tablets
IPT, ITN, bed nets (malaria
endemic area)
Resuscitation
Referral to hospital
Mouth-to-mouth resuscita- Auxiliary Nurse/
tion
Midwife
Resuscitation kit
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
Keep baby warm and dry
Skin-to-skin
KMC (being field tested)
Clean cord care
Assist in feeding
Referral to hospital
Antibiotics
Clean cord care
Referral to hospital
Dry, clean cloth to cover
baby
Auxiliary Nurse/
Midwife
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
Antibiotic (Ampicillin,
cloxacillin, Gentamycin)
Auxiliary Nurse/
Midwife
Midwife
Nurse-Midwife
Auxiliary Nurse
*Lifesaving procedures include the six functions of basic emergency obstetric care, (Box 2, page 3); 1Recommended drug of choice by the World Health Organization;
HC - Health Center; AMTSL - Active Management of Third Stage of Labor; IPT - Intermittent preventive treatment; ITN - Insecticide-treated bed nets; IV - Intravenous;
IM - Intramuscular ; MVA - Manual vacuum aspiration; KMC - Kangaroo Mother Care
Note: Configurations in the choice of care likely depend on the available infrastructure, professional skills and proximity of services to women and newborns. For more
information: Koblinsky, Marge. Essential Obstetric Care and Subsets. Basic and Emergency Obstetric Care:What's the Difference. MotherCare Policy Brief #1. Arlington,
VA: John Snow, Inc., 1999 or http://www.jsi.com/JSIInternet/Publications/women.cfm
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Using the Gap Analysis Tool to Develop a Household to Hospital Continuum of Care
Using the GAT
Who can use the GAT?
MNB health program planners, health service managers,
health workers, district managers, and community advocates, and others responsible for improving MNB health
may use the GAT.
What kind of team is needed for the GAT assessment?
At a minimum, the assessment should be carried out by a
multidisciplinary team with both quantitative and qualitative research skills. In addition, the team should have at
least one technical person, preferably with clinical training,
as well as one person familiar with community level qualitative research methods (formative research). Program
managers can choose who should lead the GAT assessment.
When can the GAT be used?
The GAT can be used in the following situations:
a. As part of the situation analysis for design of new
programs;
b. To assess gaps and select priority actions to strengthen
existing program efforts, especially in the case of working on component strengthening along the HHCC; and
c. To monitor or evaluate whether “gap filling” efforts are
successfully strengthening the system at various levels
to promote protective and curative practices.
When using the GAT, it is important to involve relevant
stakeholders and partners such as ministry of health officials, and international or local private voluntary organizations with the power to influence health policies, motivate
community acceptance, and use the results of the GAT to
select best practices to improve MNB care.
How long will the GAT assessment take?
The assessment process carried out in five Save the
Children sites lasted 5-10 days, including travel time. From
this experience, we suggest that the team plan on one to
two weeks. The duration of the assessment, however, will
vary depending on a number of factors including: the size
of the geographic area being assessed, the number of people on the assessment team, the ease of travel between
selected communities and various facilities in the intervention area, and the number of facilities included in the
assessment.
Preparing for the actual assessment
It is beneficial for the GAT assessment team to review the
existing protocols for service delivery at various levels of
the health system and the responsibilities of various cadres
of health workers as set by national standards, know the
national standards, read available background information
and formative research reports, and use other tools (e.g.,
the facility-based assessment tool) to complement activity.
Resources needed to use GAT
The costs related to implementing the GAT vary and
include staff time; consultants (where necessary); transportation (vehicle and fuel costs); computers; a planning
workshop to train the assessment team; per diem expenses
of assessment persons and drivers; and miscellaneous
expenses such as paper, pens, and pencils.
Challenges of using the GAT
The GAT faces challenges similar to other needs assessment tools: time and effort to conduct the assessment,
travel time, meetings with particular target populations and
individuals, financial resourses to carry out the assessment
and to translate the tool into different languages, adaptation of the tool to meet local conditions, and the sensitivities of partners (e.g., clinical staff) associated with conducting a review of practices and service quality.
What to do after the GAT assessment
The action planning stage, which follows the GAT assessment exercise, requires participation of stakeholders at all
levels. Stakeholders-such as Ministry of Health officials or
others with the power to influence health policies, motivate
community acceptance, and use the results of the GAT to
select best practices-need to be involved. Stakeholders
should agree on concrete actions-who will do what, when,
and by what means-to achieve best practice.
Bringing care closer to mothers and
newborns using the GAT
Save the Children applied the GAT in five countries,
including Guinea and Afghanistan, in collaboration with
ministries of health, international development partners,
and community-based organizations.
Building on an existing safe motherhood program in
Mandiana, Guinea
Save the Children's Child Survival Project in rural
Mandiana District, Upper Guinea, began in 1997. The
project included recognition of danger signs, care-seeking
for antenatal care, labor, and birth, clean delivery practices,
and tetanus toxoid vaccination as part of safe motherhood
activities. Two years later, Save the Children, with technical
assistance from the American College of Nurse Midwives
and other United States Agency for International
Save the Children
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Development (USAID)-funded partners, added a community-based life-saving skills (CBLSS) intervention into the
child survival program, with the goal of improving household health and care-seeking behaviors, improving facilitybased services in the health centers and health posts, and
mobilizing communities to use these services. In addition,
the CBLSS intervention aimed to strengthen the knowledge and skills of TBAs to recognize and respond to the
most common emergencies (hemorrhage and birth asphyxia), and to improve interaction between clients and health
facility staff and promote prompt referral.
The project engaged elderly women and traditional practitioners in a communication strategy to change social norms
to make motherhood safer. The project trained more than
100 traditional TBAs to conduct clean deliveries and
respond to cases of hemorrhage and asphyxia. According
to a 2002 evaluation, the proportion of births attended by
trained TBAs increased from 36 to 80 percent between
1998 and 2002. A majority of women (55 percent versus 13
percent at baseline) knew at least two danger signs and over
twice as many women (97 percent versus 45 percent at
baseline) received at least two antenatal consultations.
To strengthen the CBLSS intervention and improve maternity services for women in Mandiana, Save the Children
wanted to find out what kind of services were available at
the household level, in peripheral facilities, and at the district hospital. A GAT assessment in December 2001 identified gaps at each level of the continuum of care and
underlined the need to improve obstetric services-particularly for complications (see Table 2 for highlights of the
gaps identified in the assessment).
Save the Children took several steps in 2002 to address
these problems, including strengthening the referral system by using cards to improve important information
sharing and feedback between the levels of care, and
meeting with the Ministry of Health to advocate for
capacity-building of nurses and midwives to provide lifesaving care for mothers and newborns in health centers
and in the district hospital. By 2003, almost 30 midwives
and nurses from Mandiana received training in Burkina
Faso in lifesaving skills and newborn care. UNICEF
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donated a refrigerator for blood storage at the district
hospital which was vital in improving timely provision of
blood transfusion. Community members advocated for
and received an ambulance from the Ministry of Health
and other bilateral donors. A radio network connected the
health centers to the district hospital which greatly
improved referrals of obstetric and neonatal complications. A local volunteer was selected to inform the community of available maternity and newborn services and
what to expect at time of visit. The gap analysis facilitated
dialogue among different groups of people: the community, Ministry of Health authorities, and UNICEF, leading
to improvements in MNB services along the continuum
of care.
Working with the Ministry of Health in Afghanistan
to initiate a new safe motherhood and newborn
health program
In November 2003, Save the Children, in partnership with
the Ministry of Health in the Jawzjan province in northern Afghanistan, initiated a project to reduce MNB mortality through sustainable improvements in community
awareness, promotion of healthy practices, and improved
quality, access to, and use of maternal and child health
services. Project staff and partners used the GAT to
assess self care and care-seeking behavior, and the availability of and access to lifesaving interventions at the
household, periphery, and district level facilities. They
used this information to develop program strategies and
interventions with the Ministry of Health (see Table 3 for
highlights of the gaps identified in the GAT assessment).
Conclusion
By strengthening care at the household and community, and
linking it to the peripheral and district facility levels, the
HHCC approach ensures that mothers and newborns can
access preventive services and in particular lifesaving care
when they need it most-during the vulnerable days and
weeks immediately following childbirth. The GAT also provides a way for program planners to systematically assess
current MNB care, make a plan of action to address gaps
in care, and ensure the involvement of essential stakeholders such as community members and health policymakers.
Using the Gap Analysis Tool to Develop a Household to Hospital Continuum of Care
Table 2: Highlights from the GAT used to strengthen the HHCC in community-based safe motherhood programming in
Mandiana district in Upper Guinea (December 2001)
What should be available
What is the national policy What is the current proat each level of the HHCC or standard?
gram activity?
to improve MNB survival?
What is the gap?
What more can be
done (and if done
effectively) would
improve MNB survival at each level?
(i.e. filling the gap)
a) TBA attends pregnant
women
b) TBA keeps pictorial
records of pregnant women
she sees and referral
a) Inconsistencies in record
keeping by TBAs of women
seen or referred
b) Staff in facilities are unable
to track women referred by
TBAs
Strengthen referral system by using a system of
cards and feedback
mechanism
Nurses in health centers
refer all obstetric and newborn emergencies to the district hospital, because of
inadequate skills.
a) None of the peripheral
health centers have the
capacity to provide BEmOC
and essential newborn care
b) Nurses also do not have
adequate skills to manage or
provide first aid for obstetric
and newborn emergencies
a) Discuss with MOH in
a meeting the need to
build the capacity of
nurses and midwives in
health centers to provide
lifesaving care for mothers and newborns
b) Train in a phased manner all nurses and midwives in peripheral facilities to provide three (or
more) BEmOC functions
(as permitted by MOH)
c) Work with the hospital and the community to
develop system of
revolving drug fund to
assure constant supply of
essential drugs and supplies
a) District hospital and staff
a) District hospital staff should a) Doctors, midwives, nurses,
should be capable of providing be able to perform lifesaving
lab technician (the emer24/7 lifesaving care for moth- procedures and care of the
gency response team) have
ers and newborns
sick newborn
inadequate skills to manage
[Comprehensive emergency
b) District hospital should have obstetric and newborn
obstetric care (CEmOC),
equipment, drugs and supplies emergencies
Essential newborn care, Care
to provide lifesaving care to
b) Insufficient quantities of
of the sick newborn]
mothers and newborns, and
drugs and supplies
b) District hospital should have perform others functions spec- c) Absence of refrigerator
equipment, drugs and supplies ified by the MOH
to provide lifesaving care
to mothers and newActions taken: (2002)
borns
1. Midwives and nurses at peripheral health centers and the
district hospital sent to Burkina Faso for training in lifesaving skills and newborn resuscitation
2. One doctor was sent to Conakry for training in obstetric
surgery and one laboratory technician for training in blood
safety and storage
3. UNICEF provided refrigerator for blood storage
a) Lack of adequately trained
doctors, midwives, and laboratory technicians to effectively manage obstetric
emergencies
b) Hospital lacks refrigeration facilities and other
equipment and materials to
maintain blood supplies
c) Recurrent shortages of
operating and delivery supplies
d) Hospital does not provide
24-hour CEmOC due to
shortage of staff
a) Train doctors, midwives and laboratory
technicians to provide
emergency obstetric
care and essential newborn care
b) Provide means of
refrigeration (electrical
or solar) to enable staff
to type, test, transfuse
and store blood donated
by family members and
volunteers for emergency situations
c) Work with the hospital and the community to
develop system of
revolving drug fund to
assure constant supply of
essential drugs and supplies
d) Work with MOH to
find a solution to staff
shortage
"best practice"
Household and community level
Accurate record keeping
Record patient information
Peripheral level
a) Peripheral facility and staff
Peripheral facility staff not pershould be capable to provide
mitted to perform the lifesav24/7 lifesaving care for moth- ing procedures
ers and newborns (e.g. basic
emergency obstetric care and
essential newborn care)
b) Availability of supplies and
equipment for provision of lifesaving services
District hospital
HHCC - household to hospital continuum of care; MNB - maternal and newborn; MOH - Ministry of Health;TBA - traditional birth attendant; CHC - community health center; AMTSL - active management of the third stage of labor; ICG - infection control guidelines; NGO non-governmental organization
Save the Children
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Table 4: Household and community section
Draft GAT and User Guide is available from the Reproductive Health Department of the Office of Health at Save the Children
What should be at (or done at) the household and community level to improve MNB survival?
What is
the
national
policy or
standard?
What is What What more can be
the cur- is the done (and if done
rent
gap? effectively) would
program
improve MNB suractivity?
vival at each level?
(i.e. filling the gap)
Antenatal period
Availability of skilled attendant
Seek ANC with skilled attendant (e.g., midwife), where available, or TBA or CHW
Recognition of MNB danger signs during pregnancy, labor and delivery and the postpartum period, and
prompt referral by family and or community
Birth planning (e.g., emergency funds and transport, identify blood donor, place of delivery and with whom)
Maternal immunization with tetanus toxoid vaccine
Malaria prevention - Insecticide-treated bed nets, intermittent preventive treatment
Reproductive health infections including syphilis, HIV/AIDS - Provide information and counseling and
encouragement to seek screening and treatment where appropriate
Labor and birth / Care immediately after birth of baby
Presence of skilled birth attendants (where available)
Use of partograph to monitor labor by skilled attendant where feasible/appropriate
Active management of 3rd stage of labor by skilled attendant where feasible/appropriate
Safe management of labor & delivery by trained TBA or CHW10
Immediate care of newborn after delivery (warming, drying, wrapping, initiation of breastfeeding within one
hour after birth)
Recognition of danger signs and onset of MNB complications by trained TBA, CHW, and skilled attendant
for prompt referral
First aid treatment for postpartum hemorrhage - Mother
- External bi-manual compression of uterus where appropriate
- Use of (oral/IM/IV) oxytocics where appropriate
- Use of misoprostol (where appropriate)
- IV fluids (where appropriate)
- Other procedures: Hydration with oral fluids, initiation of early suckling, encouragement to pass urine
Management of birth asphyxia - Newborn
Immediate Postpartum contact and ENC
Postpartum visit by TBA, CHW, or skilled ttendant within first 72 hours after delivery
For the Newborn:
- Promotion of Immediate and exclusive breastfeeding
- Immunizations required by local policy at birth: BCG (for tuberculosis), OPV (for Polio), HB1(for hepatitis)
- Vitamin K
- Clean cord care/ hand washing
- Ophthalmia neonatorum - chemoprophylaxis
For the Mother:
- Vitamin A and Iron supplement where appropriate
- Check for ability to pass urine
Mother and Newborn: Check for:
- Bleeding (abnormal postpartum bleeding or from umbilical cord)
- Fever
- Foul smelling vaginal discharge or umbilical stump (possible onset of infection)
Postpartum contact at 6 weeks
Counseling on FP for benefits of birth spacing (outlets: community-based distributors of methods, community pharmacy shops, outreach services)
Breastfeeding support & counseling to maintain exclusive breast feeding
Prevent childhood diseases by following national guidelines on childhood immunizations
MNB - maternal and newborn; ANC - antenatal care;TBA - traditional birth attendant; CHW - community health worker; HIV/AIDS - human immunodeficiency
virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome; IM - intramuscular; IV - intravaneous; ENC - essential newborn care; FP - family planning
Save the Children
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Table 3: Highlights from applying the GAT in Afghanistan to improve maternal, newborn and child health in the
Jawzjan province (November 2003)
What should be available What is the national poli- What is the current
at each level of the
cy or standard?
program activity?
HHCC to improve MNB
survival?
What is the gap?
What more can be
done (and if done
effectively) would
improve MNB survival at each level?
(i.e. filling the gap)
a) Health workers and
male and female CHC
members have not
received training on
preparation for childbirth
b) Postnatal care not part
of home care and outreach activities
a) Assist national effort
of adapting birth planning teaching materials
for local use
b) Train health workers
in preparation for childbirth; Assist them to
train male and female
CHC members to
inform women and their
families
c) Train TBAs to recognize danger signs in
mom and newborn after
delivery plus prompt
referral
"best practice"
Household and community level
a) Counseling for preparaNone
tion for childbirth (emergency funds and transport,
identification of blood donor,
place of delivery, with whom)
b) Trained TBAs work closely
with peripheral facility staff,
in the home, at outreach
services and during homevisits
a) None
b) Trained TBAs work
closely with peripheral
facility staff, in the home, at
outreach services and during home-visits
Peripheral level
a) Peripheral facility and staff Under development
should be capable to provide
24/7 lifesaving care for mothers and newborns (e.g. basic
emergency obstetric care
and essential newborn care)
b) Availability of supplies and
equipment for provision of
lifesaving services
c) All peripheral facilities
should have a means of communication with district hospital
Preventive MCH services
a) Peripheral facility not
and recognition of dangers equipped to treat obstetsigns
ric and newborn complications
b) Health workers (mostly
midwives) not trained to
use partograpgh, perform
AMTSL, manage obstetric
complications or provide
first aid before referral to
higher facility
c) All peripheral facilities
lack telephones, transport
and other means of communication and hence fail
to inform hospital regarding emergency referral.
a) Work with MOH to
establish sustainable
equipment in facilities
b) Train communitybased midwives to use
partograph, AMTSL
(where permissible)
manage obstetric and
newborn complications
and to provide first aid
to stabilize condition for
onward referral
c) Work with district
hospital to provide
supervision of midwives
a) Blood screening and onthe-spot transfusion
b) Non-adherence to ICG
despite training
a) Determine whether
all district hospitals need
to store blood. If not,
select one which is central to population
served and provide
needed equipment and
supplies.
b) Train hospital management in supervision
for proper infection
control and for other
clinical services provided
District hospital
a) Ability to test and store
blood for emergencies
b) Adherence to ICG
Standards provided by
NGOs
Actions Taken:
1. MCH workers selected from the community undergoing 18 months training in midwifery that includes
management of obstetric and newborn complication
(November 2004).
2. GAT results used to develop program strategies and
interventions with the MOH.
a) Lack of refrigeration
and blood storage equipment
b) Inadequate supervision
of staff
HHCC - household to hospital continuum of care; MNB - maternal and newborn; MOH - Ministry of Health;TBA - traditional birth attendant; CEmOC - comprehensive emergency obstetric care; BEmOC - basic emergency obstetric care; AMTSL - active management of the third stage of labor; ICG - infection control
guidelines; NGO - non-governmental organization
8
Acknowledgements
This document was prepared by Susan Otchere (Maternal Health Advisor, Office of Health, Save the Children USA) and
Elizabeth Ransom (Research Dissemination Specialist, Saving Newborn Lives, Save the Children USA). Washington DC
Mary Beth Powers (Senior Reproductive Health Advisor, Save the Children) and David Oot (Director, Office of Health,
Save the Children) provided technical oversight during the development of the GAT tool. Eric Swedberg (Child Survival
Specialist, Save the Children) provided essential information about the safe motherhood program in Guinea. Many thanks to
colleagues in Save the Children and Ministry of Health partners in countries who participated in the GAT assessments. In
Save the Children, Dr. Tariq Aftab, Dr. Asma, Amy Kayo, Judith Moore and Winifride Mwebesa all played important roles in
the GAT assessments. Julia Ruben (Program Associate, Saving Newborn Lives initiative, Save the Children) edited and
designed the document. Helga Fostad (Technical Officer, Health Systems, Department of Making Pregnancy Safer, World
Health Organization), Karen Leban (Executive Director, The CORE Group), Virginia Lamprecht (Senior Technical Advisor,
Monitoring & Evaluation and Community-based Family Planning / Reproductive Health, USAID), Janet Myers (Family
Planning / Reproductive Health Technical Advisor, Child Survival Technical Support Project), David Marsh (Senior Child
Survival Advisor, Save the Children), Martita Marx (Deputy Director, Saving Newborn Lives initiative, Save the Children),
and Anne Tinker (Director, Saving Newborn Lives initiative, Save the Children) reviewed drafts of the article and provided
helpful suggestions.
Photo credits: Michael Biscelgie/Save the Children (front); Julia Ruben/Save the Children (back)
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SAVE THE CHILDREN is a leading international nonprofit
child-assistance organization working in over 40 countries worldwide, including the United States. Our mission is to make lasting
positive change in the lives of children in need. Save the Children
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and protect the rights of children everywhere.
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Foundation, is Save the Children’s global initiative to improve the
health and survival of newborns in the developing world. Saving
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real and lasting change in newborn health.
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Using the Gap Analysis Tool to Develop a Household to Hospital Continuum of Care
Save the Children
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